I would normally be posting the day’s schedule beneath this poster here on the blog. This time I am posting just the link. I noticed that on the far right of each event listed there is a space for a link to Presentation Materials and Handouts that you can download. There is nothing there at the moment and may not be until we get closer to the date of the fair. I don’t want you to miss them, so here is the link you can save and check periodically. https://www.archives.gov/calendar/genealogy-fair/2017/schedule-handouts Posted handouts are useful even when you can’t attend an event. If you are interested in a particular presentation and can’t watch it on the 25th, check the archives site later. Often these are posted so people can access them after the event is over.

Conservation. Preservation. What’s the difference? These two words are often used interchangeably, but they do mean different things. I often found myself getting confused by the two terms, so I contacted the Boston Public Library. Stuart Walker, a Book Conservator at the BPL provided this clarification. “Preservation encompasses all the range of things people (such as conservators) do to maintain collections or individual items in the best condition possible. This includes cleaning, temperature and RH control, education of the public, pest management, disaster preparedness and recovery planning, mass deacidification programs, digitization, etc. etc. Conservation refers to specific repair work on materials, whether whole collections, or individual items.”

As you pull together your family documents, photographs, letters, and other materials, you may discover that some have deteriorated. If not now, they may over time. Paper has all sorts of enemies — dampness, heat, light, fire, insects, rodents, even the acid that can be part of the paper itself. If you look at an old book and see the pages crumble as you turn them, the book is made of highly acidic paper, often from pine wood. If you look at a book made of older paper, say around the 1770s, it will often be in very good shape. Why? It’s made using bleached rags, hence the term rag paper. Photographs pose problems as well. And newspaper clippings become brittle very quickly.

What if you are concerned about family heirlooms, furniture or even an historic home. Organizations such as Historic New England (formerly know as The Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities) are deeply involved in the conservation and preservation of houses built during specific periods and everything that goes into them — clothing, quilts, wall paper, curtains, furniture, cooking utensils, farming implements…

Think about the critical written records of your family, the photographs, the family heirlooms. To be available to future generations, they must all be preserved and damaged ones may be able to be repaired (conserved). If this is a concern, you should consult a person with experience in this field for advice. This is not a do-it-yourself project. It is better to leave something alone than to unintentionally do more damage. “First do no harm” applies to family archives as well as to doctors.

QUICK TIP: NEVER, EVER use tape on anything you want to save. Just look at an old book that has been repaired with tape or photographs that have been added with tape. Tape ruins whatever it touches.

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The Newton Genealogy Club

The Genealogy Club meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7:00 pm in the Special Collections Room of the Newton Free Library. Special Collections is on the first floor to your left as you are walking to the back of the library.

The club meets to share information on records and approaches for starting or extending participants’ genealogical research. Novices and experienced researchers are both welcome and encouraged to bring records and problems from their own research for discussion.

The coordinator of the club is Ginny Audet. Contact by email: NewtonGenealogyClub@gmail.com.